Heritage Sporting Events and Place Marketing

Heritage Sporting Events and Place Marketing

View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Serveur académique lausannois HERITAGE SPORTING EVENTS AND PLACE MARKETING Jean-Loup CHAPPELET INTRODUCTION Over the last twenty years, many cities, regions and countries have introduced strategies and policies to systematically host sports events, and allocated human and financial resources to attract elite or mass-participation single-sport or multi- sport competitions (Chappelet 2006, Mantei 2011, Zakias 2014). Such policies have often been inspired by cities hosting a major event and then seeking ways of reusing facilities built at great cost for the occasion. An early example of this is Sheffield, in England, where a special unit of the council, set up after the city hosted the 1991 Universiades, has brought a whole series of events to the city (Henry 1999). Several urban centers in the UK have now copied this pioneering strategy, supported by the government body UK Sport. The culmination of these strategies was the attribution of the 2012 Olympic Games to London and of the 2014 Commonwealth Games to Glasgow. However, the 1990s saw a huge increase in the number of cities wishing to host major sports events, starting with the Olympics. Bids for the 1984 and 1988 Summer Olympics were received from only one (Los Angeles) and two (Seoul and Nagoya) cities, respectively. However, the organizational and financial success of Los Angeles 1984 and Seoul 1988 inspired many more cities to consider an Olympic future. As a result, six cities bid for the 1992 Games, awarded to Barcelona, eight cities bid for the 2002 Winter Olympics, awarded to Salt Lake City, and a record eleven cities bid for the 2004 Olympics, awarded to Athens. 57 SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF SPORTS TOURISM Today, competition to host the Olympic Games and a number of other sports events, such as major championships and the Football World Cup, is so great that entire countries have begun introducing, either explicitly or implicitly, policies to attract sports events. Such countries include Denmark (through Sport Event Denmark), Qatar (via the National Olympic Committee) and Russia (whose prime minister, re-elected president in 2012, takes a personal interest in the matter). Following the Euro 2008 football championships in Switzerland and Austria and the failed bids for the 2002, 2006 and 2010 Winter Olympics, Switzerland now has a federal policy for attracting sports events (Weber 2010). France also has a strategic committee for international competitions (CNOSF 2011). Created in 2010, this committee is charged with carrying out feasibility studies for hosting major events and proposing any legislative, regulatory and financial measures needed to maximize France’s chances of being attributed such events. It also includes an “Expertise and International Resources” unit, coordinated by the National Center for Developing Sport, whose tasks include assessing potential bids for major sports events and examining requests for bid subsidies. Paris should bid for the 2024 Olympics together with Boston, Hamburg, Rome and other cities, although the number of Olympic bids has dwindled since the 1990s. As a result of the sometime frantic race to obtain major competitions, many cities and sub-national territories are turning to smaller or less coveted sports events, events in minor sports or trendy events that do not require major infrastructure. This is the case for Lausanne. In the 1990s Lausanne hosted several world championships, under the impetus of former International Olympic Committee president Juan Antonio Samaranch (curling 1988 and 2001, badminton 1995, figure skating 1997, gymnastics 1997, triathlon 1998, chess 1998, etc.). Today, Lausanne focusses on less-prestigious competitions that nevertheless provide a substantial boost to the local economy due to the number of participants involved. For example, the orienteering world championships (2002, 2012) or the World Gymnaestrada 2011 which brought almost 20,000 gymnasts, of all ages and backgrounds, and of 55 nationalities to the “Olympic Capital”, as well as the candidature for the 2020 Winter Youth Olympic Games. One drawback of downsizing event-hosting strategies to smaller events is that their promotional effects are much more limited than those of major competitions. In addition, smaller events do not have a great impact on regional development, especially in terms of enabling a city or area to stand out on the tourist-destination 58 HERITAGE SPORTING EVENTS AND PLACE MARKETING map. Even the biggest one-time events are often forgotten as soon as they are over, despite receiving extensive media coverage during the event. Who remembers where most world championships took place a year after the event? And who would choose a holiday destination or a base for their company on the basis of such a championship? Given the difficulty of promoting development via the classic approach to event hosting, ever larger numbers of cities and regions are turning towards “heritage sporting events” or events that have the potential to become heritage events over the years. The present article provides a definition of this relatively new concept and, focusing on Switzerland, examines possible ways in which such events can be used to boost territorial development. This analysis suggests that local authorities, especially in Europe, should implement policies to host heritage sporting events as a way of reinforcing development and resisting the escalation in bids to host major competitions being driven by certain countries such as Azerbaijan, Qatar and Russia. THE NOTION OF HERITAGE SPORTING EVENT Although many sports events have close links with a particular city or a specific venue - for example, the Roland-Garros tennis arena in Paris - and are part of a place’s heritage, the literature rarely associates the concepts of sports event and heritage. A heritage sporting event can be defined as an event, generally involving a single sport, that has taken place in the same place for many years and that has been held regularly since its foundation. Table 1 provides examples of such events that were founded more than 50 years ago (outside Switzerland, which will be examined in the next section) and that are still held every year, even if there have been breaks in their histories. 59 SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OF SPORTS TOURISM Table 1: Examples of heritage sporting events founded before 1970 (outside Switzerland) Founded Official name Sport City Country 1656 Palio di Siena Horse riding Sienna Italy 1780 The Derby Stakes Horse riding Epsom, England Great Britain Henley-on- 1839 The Henley Royal Regatta Rowing Great Britain Thames 1850 Wenlock Olympian Games Multi sports Much Wenlock Great Britain Ayrshire, 1860 The Open Championships Golf Great Britain Scotland Louisville, 1875 The Kentucky Derby Horse riding United States Kentucky The All England Lawn Wimbledon, 1877 Tennis Championships Tennis Great Britain London Meeting Lord’s, St John’s 1884 England test matches Cricket Great Britain Wood, London Liège to Bastogne 1892 Liège-Bastogne-Liège Cycling Belgium and back 1896 Paris-Roubaix Cycling Paris to Roubaix France Boston, 1897 Boston Marathon Athletics United States Massachusetts 1905 Australian Open Tennis Melbourne Australia Milan to San 1907 Milano-San Remo Cycling Italy Remo 1909 Hatsu basho Sumo Tokyo Japan From and to 1909 Elfstedentocht Speed skating Leeuwarden, Netherlands through 11 towns Cross-country 1922 Vassaloppet Sälen to Mora Sweden skiing Internationaux de France 1925 Tennis Paris France Roland-Garros Holy Saturday Cross 1928 Cycling Belize City Belize Country Cycle Classic 1931 Hahnenkamm-Rennen Alpine skiing Kitzbühel, Tyrol Austria 1934 The Masters Golf Augusta, Georgia United States 1945 Sydney-Hobart Yacht Race Sailing Sydney to Hobart Australia 1950 Boxing Day Test Cricket Melbourne Australia St-Etienne to 1951 La Sainté Lyon Athletics France Lyon 60 HERITAGE SPORTING EVENTS AND PLACE MARKETING Founded Official name Sport City Country Obserstdorf, Garmisch, Germany and 1952 Vierschanzentournee Ski jumping Innsbruck and Austria Bischofshofen Tuen Ng Dragon Boat Rowing/ 1960 Hong Kong China Festival Kayaking 1961 Pokal Vitranc Alpine skiing Kranjska Gora Slovenia Mostar Bridge Diving 1968 Diving Mostar Bosnia Competition Source: Author’s compilation The ancestors of these heritage events are the ancient Olympic Games held every four years since 776 BC for almost twelve hundred years, and the various Panhellenic games held throughout Antiquity (Pythian Games, Nemean Games, etc.). These ancient games have been succeeded by multi-sport events that move from city to city and are therefore not part of any single city’s heritage (modern Olympic Games, Mediterranean Games, Commonwealth Games, Student Games or Universiads, etc.). Sienna’s Palio, a horse race through the Tuscan city’s main square that was first run in 1656, is another of these ancestral events, as modern sport had not yet been invented when it was founded. The Palio is now a major tourist attraction. The Wenlock Olympian Games, founded by Dr William Penny Brook and held since 1850 at Much Wenlock in Shropshire (England), was one of the inspirations for the modern Olympics, founded by Pierre de Coubertin in 1892. Unlike almost all other heritage events which are centered on one sport, the Wenlock Olympian Games is a multi-sport event. In the case of modern sport, invented in the 18th century in Great Britain, it is unsurprising that the oldest heritage sporting events are in this country and involve sports that were once a British preserve, such as rowing, golf, horse racing, and lawn tennis. At the end of the 19th century, continental Europe and the United States entered the arena with different sports (cycling, athletics, and winter sports). However, except for Australia, there are very few other countries and continents on this list because the rapid growth in global sport did not begin until the 1950s. In the French-language literature, the notion of heritage event has been associated with the concept of “place of memory”, defined by the historian Pierre Nora in his 1984 book “Lieux de mémoire”.

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